Kill with signal number 0 is commonly used for checking PID existence. Smack treated such cases like any other kills, although no signal is actually delivered when sig == 0. Checking permissions when sig == 0 didn't prevent an unprivileged caller from learning whether PID exists or not. When it existed, kernel returned EPERM, when it didn't - ESRCH. The only effect of policy check in such case is noise in audit logs. This change lets Smack silently ignore kill() invocations with sig == 0. Signed-off-by: Rafal Krypa <r.krypa@samsung.com> Acked-by: Casey Schaufler <casey@schaufler-ca.com> |
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| .. | ||
| apparmor | ||
| integrity | ||
| keys | ||
| loadpin | ||
| selinux | ||
| smack | ||
| tomoyo | ||
| yama | ||
| commoncap.c | ||
| device_cgroup.c | ||
| inode.c | ||
| Kconfig | ||
| lsm_audit.c | ||
| Makefile | ||
| min_addr.c | ||
| security.c | ||